DeMint resignation removes a conservative hero, political thorn from Senate

Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina, who in just a few years became a hero to conservative activists nationwide for his vehement anti-government voice and willingness to confront even fellow Republicans, surprised colleagues Thursday by saying he will resign the Senate to run an influential inside-the-Beltway think tank.

DeMint will leave Congress in the next month. This spring, he will take over the Heritage Foundation, a prominent advocacy group with which he has worked closely during his rapid rise from a virtually unknown lawmaker to a conservative kingmaker who bankrolled Senate candidates willing to defy party leaders in order to slash federal spending.His exit frees the Senate Republican leadership from a frequent political irritant. But DeMint’s new role puts him in position to forcefully push the conservative agenda as the GOP undergoes a period of political introspection following its failure to deny President Barack Obama a second term and to take control of the Senate.

“One of the most rewarding things I’ve done in the Senate is work with the grassroots to help elect a new generation of leaders who have the courage to fight for the principles of freedom that make this country so great,” DeMint said in a statement announcing his resignation. “I’m confident these senators will continue the legacy of conservative leaders before them.”

DeMint became known as Senator Tea Party for his hard-ribbed opposition to congressional spending earmarks, immigration reform and the landmark health care bill that Obama signed into law in 2010. He gained an easy re-election to a second term that same year.

DeMint’s passionate following among conservatives across the country helped him become a fundraising giant, whose Senate Conservatives Fund spent more than $25 million to help propel eight candidates to the Senate in the 2010 and 2012 elections.

“Jim DeMint has shown that principled conservatism remains a winning political philosophy,” said Thomas Saunders, chairman of the Heritage Foundation’s board of directors. “This is a crucial moment for America and the conservative movement, and we are seizing it.”

Saunders said DeMint will join the prominent conservative think tank in April, replacing current head Edwin Feulner.

Despite DeMint’s success in getting some of his acolytes elected to Congress, he also drew criticism from Republican leaders and conservative commentators. Many blamed him for backing other candidates whose general election losses helped cost the party a Senate majority in the past two congressional elections.

Republican South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley will appoint DeMint’s replacement to serve alongside senior Sen. Lindsey Graham. The next statewide election will be held in 2014.

With Haley’s approval rating in her state at 38.3 percent, according to a Winthrop University poll released this week, prominent politicians in South Carolina speculated that she might resign as governor and then be appointed U.S. senator by Lt. Gov. Glenn McConnell, who would replace her as the state government’s top executive.

Haley ruled that scenario out in her public comments Thursday. “No, I will not be appointing myself,” she told a local radio station. “That is not even an option, not something I’m considering at all.”

Haley said DeMint’s “voice for freedom and limited government has been a true inspiration.”

One possible successor is U.S. Rep. Tim Scott of Charleston, the only black Republican in Congress, a scenario DeMint was pushing behind the scenes.

Scott and South Carolina’s other three House of Representatives Republican freshmen, all strong tea party supporters, have looked to DeMint for guidance and had frequent strategy sessions with him since coming to Washington almost two years ago. Reps. Mick Mulvaney of Indian Land and Trey Gowdy of Spartanburg also are viewed as possible DeMint successors.

“His commitment to conservative principles leaves a true legacy, and I have greatly enjoyed getting to know and work with him,” Scott said.

Related stories from McClatchy DC

Some leading conservative activists around the country had prodded DeMint to run for president this year, but he said he wanted to remain in the Senate and help elect true conservatives to the upper chamber of Congress. In an interview with McClatchy last week, he declined to rule out a White House run.

DeMint said he’ll leave the Senate early next month, before the start of the next congressional session, an important date because it means, under South Carolina law, that whoever Haley appoints as his replacement will have to run for re-election in 2014 instead of in 2016, when DeMint’s second term would have ended.

DeMint’s job change could mean a nearly sixfold pay increase from his current Senate salary of $174,000. Feulner earned just more than $1 million in 2010, according to the 990 tax form the Heritage Foundation is required to file with the Internal Revenue Service as a non-profit group.

At Heritage, DeMint will have a new pulpit from which to preach his conservative ideals, prod incumbent lawmakers on matters of small government and give voice to promising conservative candidates.

DeMint did just that by aiding Sen. Marco Rubio, a leading 2016 Republican presidential aspirant whom DeMint backed for the Senate in 2010 when other party leaders were supporting then-Florida Gov. Charlie Crist. Rubio was quick Thursday to credit his political patron.

“Sen. DeMint is one of the main reasons why I’m in the U.S. Senate,” said Rubio, a Cuban-American former Florida House speaker. “When I ran for the Senate 2 1/2 years ago, no one thought I had a chance to win. Jim DeMint was the first person in Washington that believed in me and invested in me, and I’m eternally grateful.”

DeMint and Graham have helped make South Carolina a central front in the national battle over their party’s core identity as they cast conflicting votes on immigration reform, various spending measures and Obama’s Supreme Court nominees.

Graham, who sees a bigger role for Congress in federal funding, said he was stunned when DeMint told him Thursday morning he would be leaving the Senate.

“Jim made the Republican Party, quite frankly, look inward and do some self-evaluation,” Graham said on the Senate floor. “Jim is right to say that our debt is unsustainable, that Washington does too much and there’s a better way.”

In an indirect reference to their differences, Graham added: “I think we’ve done a pretty darn good job for South Carolina, at times playing the good cop, the bad cop, but always trying to work together, and what differences we’ve had have been sincere.”

DeMint described the widening divide within the party in his 2011 book, “The Great American Awakening,” saying that he faced contempt from other Republican senators as he tried to curb appropriators’ powers and limit senior members’ clout.

DeMint accused President George W. Bush of spending too much and otherwise abandoning conservative principles, and he detailed clashes with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who told him in one encounter: “Jim, you can’t change Washington.”

McConnell papered over their conflicts Thursday in praising DeMint.

“Jim helped provide a powerful voice for conservative ideals in a town where those principles are too often hidden beneath business as usual,” McConnell said. “There is no question in my mind that he raised the profile of important issues like spending and debt, and helped galvanize the American people against a big-government agenda.”

DeMint also clashed with Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, by funding conservatives who ran against Cornyn’s chosen candidates. Cornyn was more muted than McConnell on Thursday.

“I congratulate Jim and look forward to continuing to work with him as we fight for the causes and beliefs that we as conservatives hold dear,” Cornyn said.

DeMint was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1998 and served six years there before winning the 2004 Senate election to replace the retiring Sen. Fritz Hollings, a Democrat.

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